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New Tesco and Yeo Valley partnership creates a yogurt with a mission

Tesco and Yeo Valley have joined forces to create a delicious new yogurt variety to help tackle food waste and support food redistribution charity, FareShare.

This is the latest move by the retailer in its bid to reduce food waste from farm to fork.

Tesco has partnered with leading organic dairy, Yeo Valley, and Adam Wakeley, the UK’s largest organic fruit grower to create an exclusive new Apple and Custard Left-Yeovers yogurt which helps to tackle food waste.

The yogurt uses visually imperfect, but great tasting apples, to create the delicious and exciting seasonal flavour.

The Left-Yeovers range, which has been championed by Tesco in recent months, helps to prevent food waste by using surplus fruit from the Yeo Valley storerooms, and also raises money for a very important cause, with 10p from every pot sold donated to food redistribution charity, FareShare.

It is hoped up to £7,000 will be raised to help with the redistribution of fresh, quality, surplus food to charities and community groups across the UK, which is then transformed into nutritious meals for vulnerable people.

Previous Left-Yeovers flavours have included Strawberry & Fig, Plum & Custard and Banoffee, and raised £20,000 for FareShare so far.

Tesco’s Commercial Director for Fresh Food Matt Simister said:

“Left-Yeovers is a great tasting yogurt with a clear mission – to help tackle food waste by using the whole of our growers’ organic crop.

“This project is a brilliant example of how we and our producers are taking a creative approach to reducing food waste, at every step of the journey of our food.”

Adrian Carne Joint Managing Director of Yeo Valley said:

“Our Apples and Custard yogurt is made with organic Santana fruit grown in Gloucester. The juicy apples are blended with a creamy custard yogurt made in our Somerset dairy.

“Made with quality produce, this will be a real treat for customers and through this fantastic partnership with Tesco, it will also help people in their community.”

Four years ago Tesco pledged to help reduce food waste right across the food chain and has set a target of insuring no food safe for human consumption goes to waste inside its UK operations by the end of 2017.

The new collaboration between Tesco, Yeo Valley and Adam Wakeley builds on the success of a similar initiative it developed with their ready meals and potato producers, which turns misshapen potatoes which would otherwise have gone to waste, into mashed potato for ready meals.

Tesco and its suppliers have also partnered on the following food waste projects:

A partnership between Branston, its potato growers and Samworths, its ready meal supplier which uses visually imperfect but entirely edible potatoes.

The introduction of Farm Brands and Perfectly Imperfect ranges, which allows the retailer to use up to 95 per cent of growers’ crops.

Reducing the number of steps in the journey for food from farm to fork, which adds two days extra freshness for popular fruit and veg items like citrus, lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, broccoli and celery.

ENDS

Notes to editors

Left-Yeovers is available exclusively at Tesco and will be on sale for £1.50

Tesco and Yeo Valley will each donate 5p from every pot that is sold to FareShare

Since 2008, Adam Wakeley has partnered with Tesco by supplying the retailer with apples from a dedicated organic orchard.

FareShare redistribute in-date, good food from the food & drink industry, that would otherwise go to waste, to frontline charities and community groups that support vulnerable people, including homeless shelters, children’s breakfast clubs and domestic violence refuges.

Tesco has been working with FareShare for four years. The partnership includes activities which make food available from the Tesco supply chain, distribution centres and dotcoms centres. This has seen 15 million meals made up of surplus food donated to over 2,500 charities and community groups across the UK. This is in addition to the FareShare FoodCloud partnership, which has seen over 5 million meals distributed through Tesco’s Community Food Connection programme.